Now,
in the odd numbered frames, 3 - 23, we will be placing slightly
different action statements. In these frames we will place "Go
to and
Play [ ]" action statements.

Each
of these will point back to the frame immediately before it.

Example:
Frame 3 says, "Go to and Play [2]". This sets up a small loop
for the animation to go through while it waits for the next scheduled
frame to get done loading. Without these loops, your movie will
not display the countdown properly.

Re-Save
your Flash movie.

Publish
the animation, creating a new .swf file and HTML file.

As
long as both of these files are in the same folder on your Web site,
the Flash movie will play when you select the HTML page.

Test
your movie as follows: While still in the Flash creation studio, select
"Control"… "Test Scene"… "Control"… "Show Streaming"… and set it as
a 56K download. This allows you to see the counters as they "load.

*Note:
The above-mentioned movie was designed for use with this tutorial.
It is a retrospective look at many of the subjects we studied in our
Internet Programming classes the past two semesters. However...
it's a rather large file size, (480KB), and you may not find it as interesting
as the students for which was originally designed. So
for more fun, you may rather see my CNC
Lathe Flash movie (300KB), which uses a similar (yet better)
Countdown To Showtime preload than that described in the tutorial...
and has a cool animated CNC Lathe making a virtual machined part!

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CIS281Programming Related To The Internet